News and features from the Anglican Communion Spring 2020 A BISHOP’S PASSION FOR CHANGE − Page 4 MISSION IN MALAWI − Page 18 TOWARDS KOINONIA − Page 22 Welcome to Transmission TRANSMISSION Welcome to the first Transmission of the new News and views from USPG decade and for the Spring of 2020. As we enter a and our global Anglican new epoch, USPG is entering a new visual era. Communion partners in Christ. Whilst USPG’s instantly recognisable colours will remain navy blue and vibrant pink, over the next The views expressed here do twelve months you will start to see the USPG logo not necessarily represent the change to something we hope will be more inclusive official views of USPG or any of of our cherished global partners. its employees. At the same time, Transmission will undergo Editor: Linda Mackenzie MBE a transformation of its own. The new magazine Designer: Monika Ciapala will be an A4 format which should lend it a more contemporary look and a greater opportunity to ISSN 0967-926X share images from around the world. Whilst Transmission is We welcome contributions from our partners distributed free of charge, any everywhere and look forward to receiving your news donations to cover USPG costs and stories throughout the year. of production will be welcomed. We are delighted and excited in equal measure that USPG will launch a new website later in the year. The address will remain as: USPG.org.uk To subscribe to Transmission We have also recently launched the USPG free of charge, please email Pinterest account, so please do engage with USPG [email protected] on social media wherever you are - we love to share our stories and hear your news from around the world as well. USPG is the Anglican mission All of us at USPG offer you our prayers and good agency that partners churches wishes for the forthcoming year. and communities worldwide in God’s mission to enliven Linda Mackenzie MBE faith, strengthen relationships, Head of Media and unlock potential and champion Communications USPG justice. Founded 1701. PHOTO: Katerina Gerhardt USPG, 5 Trinity Street, London SE1 1DB 020 7921 2200 [email protected] www.uspg.org.uk REGISTERED CHARITY NO. 234518 USPGglobal Cover: 15th century Trinity Lavra founded by St Sergius Radonezh in Sergiyev Posad. It is one of the largest monasteries in Russia. PHOTO: Sergey Ashmarin/Creative Commons 2 NEWSNEWS Living with difference We live in a world where many are church leaders an opportunity to prayerfully seeking to build walls between nations and earnestly engage in discussions focused and peoples. Such barriers reflect those of on how best to mitigate the effects of climate hearts and minds. They divide and diminish change whilst simultaneously planning for the our humanity by reinforcing the idea that future. difference is threatening. The effects of climate change are of Sadly, Christians and churches have also profound concern for our global partners been divided. and for USPG. For example, in Malawi We are, however, as Christians, called the churches and USPG seek to mitigate to challenge division and break down this vulnerability though an integrated misunderstanding: to build up a common programme which includes irrigation life and to liberate ourselves and others into technology and a Voluntary Savings and Loan a more generous understanding of what it scheme and we are delighted that the ‘Green means to be more fully human; to work for Schools’ initiative in South India has been unity in diversity. commended by the United Nations. Those who travel with USPG programmes May we seek not just to live with, but to like Exchanging Places, Expanding Horizons learn from and take delight in our differences and Journey with Us, bear ample testimony to in Christ in 2020. the transformative possibilities of encountering Christ in another context and country. The Rev’d Duncan Dormor In January I had the immense privilege USPG General Secretary of being with sisters and brothers in the Church of South India. Founded in 1947 with the coming together of four different denominations (including Anglicans), the CONTENTS formation of the CSI was the high point of the ecumenical movement: A deeply faithful 3 Editorial response to Christ’s words ‘That they all may 4 How Africa helped ignite new bishop’s passion for change be one’ - CSI’s foundational text. 6 UN Climate Change Conference This year sees the 50th anniversary of two of the founding of two other United Churches 7 ‘Green Schools’ champion care for the environment - that of North India and of Pakistan. It is also 8 Transforming lives in India the 50th anniversary of the Anglican Church of 10 My Status, My Health, My Life Tanzania and that of the Church in Myanmar. Truly a year of celebrations! 12 Expanding Horizons We look to Lambeth 2020 as a year to 16 Church of the Province of Myanmar spearheads health in the community strengthen our response to God’s call to work 17 New System for Stamp Collecting ever more closely together as Anglicans and with our ecumenical partners. In preparation 18 Mission in Malawi for that, USPG has produced a study guide, 20 Celebrating 50 years of unity Living with a World of Difference, which 22 Towards a Koinonia of Love and Equality explores how a variety of differences are 24 The reluctant ordinand negotiated within the world church. 26 Tao Po: Justice and Humanity The Lambeth Conference 2020 will offer 27 Looking forward to July 2020 3 NEWS How Africa helped ignite new bishop’s passion for change On her appointment as Bishop of Reading strong, patient - particularly the women who last year, the Rt Rev’d Olivia Graham are amazing examples of courage.’ described it as her ‘dream job’. She spoke Bishop Olivia recalls that her studies of being excited, daunted and energised by gave her theoretical knowledge about how the opportunity to have a ministry that was economic and political structures work, but more outward-facing. ‘My passions have it was Africa that ignited a passion to see always been much more focused on the change. world and the church’s interface with the ‘I am very passionate about the issues of world,’ she said. global inequality. I am very clear that it has its Bishop Olivia’s ministry since ordination roots in the historic and sometimes current in 1997 has been almost entirely within the systematic economic exploitation by rich Oxford diocese but she says she has Africa in nations of the poor nations. I am constantly her blood. She first went as a teenager when shocked by the scale of global inequality.’ her father travelled to South Africa to work. She has expressed her desire to speak She went back in her own right ‘as soon as I out on issues of injustice and inequality but is could,’ becoming a volunteer teacher in Kenya realistic about what she can achieve. aged 18. After six years she returned to the ‘If that issue going to be tackled, then the UK to take a degree in Development Studies. whole world economic system needs to be But Africa drew her again after graduation in reformed. We have to encourage our political 1984. She spent a further eight years in relief leaders to be more long-term in their thinking and development work in Djibouti, Somalia and in their approach to the challenge of and Senegal. global capitalism. But I don’t think there Africa made a lasting impression. ‘It is a lot an individual bishop can do. I am means two things: the smell and feeling interested in joining with others and bringing when I get off an aeroplane or boat and stand what weight we can to bear.’ on that continent and smell the air and feel Global inequality plays out powerfully in the ancientness of it,’ she says. ‘But more another issue close to Bishop Olivia’s heart: importantly, it means the people... their climate change. resilience and optimism and extraordinary ‘We (in the UK) may think we have a hospitality and willingness to relate. I have climate emergency but talk to our friends met people who are self-sufficient, optimistic, in South Africa or pretty much anywhere ‘I am very passionate about the issues of global inequality. I am very clear that it has its roots in the historic and sometimes current systematic economic exploitation by rich nations of the poor nations. I am constantly shocked by the scale of global inequality.’ 4 NEWSNEWS else in the global south and they will tell Bishop Olivia’s hero is Archbishop you it is a catastrophe and a matter of daily Desmond Tutu, whom she describes as survival. Things are way ahead in terms of incredibly courageous. She has said she will environmental degradation in other parts of need to cultivate courage of her own as she the world’. speaks out on issues which touch not just her But she believes Christians can make diocese but the rest of the world. a difference as part of the global Church pushing for change, and as individuals making 'I am a fan of the right decisions about how they live and spend their kind of link, done for the money. ‘Those who belong to our faith right reasons' communities are consumers and many are also shareholders. That is a source of power. If we think about the Church as the body of Christ, each cell of the body has the ability to exert influence. Then I think we are onto something that gives us cause for hope’. Bishop Olivia describes herself as a cradle Anglican, who was touched by the mystery and sense of otherness of church services.
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